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US weight-loss drugmakers slash prices in fight to win customers

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An injection pen of Zepbound, Eli Lilly’s weight loss drug, is displayed in New York City, U.S., December 11, 2023.
A monthly dose of Zepbound cost more than $1,000 when it launched in the US in 2023 [Reuters]

When Ruth Gonzalez decided to start taking the weight-loss medicine Zepbound last year, she first had to find a way to afford its roughly $350 (£260) monthly cost.

Gonzalez switched her mobile phone plan, dropped all but one of her streaming subscriptions, limited her grocery spending and cut out Starbucks.

The 56-year-old, who is self-employed and pays out of her own pocket because her health insurance does not cover weight-loss drugs, says the financial sacrifices have been worth it.

The spike in her blood pressure, which had scared her into seeking a prescription, was back to normal within six weeks. She has also lost more than 40lb (18kg), dropping her weight to 175lb (79kg), which she is hoping will help her with subsequent diagnoses of sleep apnoea and incipient fatty liver disease.

Perhaps more unexpectedly, some of her financial strains have also started to ease.

In December, Zepbound-maker Eli Lilly lowered the price of its vials by $50-$100 (£37.50-£75), allowing her to start taking a more powerful, and expensive, dose. Now she is eyeing new options, including an even lower-cost weight-loss pill the company is expected to launch in the coming months.

“For someone on a fixed budget, it is absolutely helpful,” she says.

The price cuts helping Gonzalez have caught attention in the US, where prescription medications are notoriously expensive.

They reflect a cutthroat competition occurring between weight-loss drugmakers in the US, as they look to capitalise on a potential sales bonanza in the country, where the obesity rate among adults is roughly 40%.

Normally, such battles would occur behind closed doors, as manufacturers, insurance companies, employers and other firms furiously negotiate coverage, rebates and other factors, before presenting the final bill to patients.

But in the case of weight-loss drugs, known as GLP-1s, many private and government insurers have baulked at the potential costs and refused to cover the medicines solely to treat weight.

That has left millions of people in the US, like Gonzalez, paying for them on their own and pushed pharmaceutical firms to seek and compete for customers like a regular retailer.

They have launched direct-to-consumer sales websites, struck distribution deals with retail giants such as Walmart and Costco, and launched court battles against off-label rivals.

Perhaps most importantly, the firms have slashed their prices.

A starting dose of Wegovy is now available to self-pay patients for just $149 a month, compared with a list price of more than $1,600 a month when it first launched in the US in 2021. Vials of Lilly’s Zepbound start at $299 a month, down from more than $1,000 when it launched in 2023.

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